CRIMEFIGHTERS

BUILDING CONFIDENCE IN POLICING

More police officers than ever before

〰️

Cutting 101 waiting times

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More police officers than ever before

〰️

Visible hotspot patrols

〰️

More police officers than ever before 〰️ Cutting 101 waiting times 〰️ More police officers than ever before 〰️ Visible hotspot patrols 〰️

"To fight crime by building public confidence, seeking to prevent and deter crime wherever possible and seek justice for victims."

Justified or not, confidence in policing has undoubtedly been damaged in recent years. Our mission may not be simple but it is clear: to fight crime and build confidence in policing across Thames Valley.

Headline issues, often, but not always, from other forces around the country can certainly colour the public's perception about the way they are policed. These are important matters that need to be, and are being, addressed by Thames Valley Police. The much bigger contributor to public confidence, however, is our own experiences and those of our friends and loved ones.

Whilst fashions and buzzwords come and go, the simple fact remains that policing will be judged by how safe we feel in our own communities.

The purpose of this strategy is to give the public the confidence to support the police within their communities; to give the police the organisational confidence to become more proactive and focus on preventing crime; and to give our communities the confidence to live without the fear of crime.

Ambitious yet achievable goals, concrete steps towards which are further described within this strategy.

There are some pressing issues that policing generally, not just Thames Valley Police, need to address. There are challenges of dealing with the increasing demand of a growing population. These are combined with the pressures of protected learning time for new police officers recruited through the Police Education Qualifications Framework (PEQF). Together, these issues often seem to set the police's organisation priorities against the needs of the public. The need to manage demand can create a situation that seems to push the public further away from the police. The focus on high harm incidents means that many offences are now dealt with as volume crimes - the very name suggesting a level of acceptance and toleration of offending.

In such a climate, confidence in policing has fallen. The solution to the challenge is in fact to embrace the Peelian Principles of community engagement and crime prevention.

By improving the ways in which the public can contact the police - and importantly the ways in which the police report back to the public - we can begin not just to increase confidence and improve crime reporting, but crucially to give the public the courage and confidence to report their concerns more widely.

The Force needs the courage to restructure to put community policing at the heart of its operations. This means setting out a clear purpose, structure and methodology for community policing. This will only be effective by pro-actively preventing crime, and therefore reducing the demand on response areas of policing. Reducing crime in our communities, and robustly dealing with those who do break the law, will further build public confidence. Giving communities the confidence to live without the fear of crime is better for us all, socially, economically and personally. This further breaks down barriers between the police and the public, giving more confidence to report incidents and crime in the future, trusting that the police really are the crimefighters the public expect.

Find out more below…

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